65 So. 962 | Ala. | 1914
The damages which, neces sarily, resulted to the sender and the sendee of the telegram, were the cost of the telegram and the actual sum of the separate losses -which were sustained by the sender and sendee of the telegram, because of the error which Avas committed by the telegraph company in
1. It was, of course, the duty of the plaintiff, when it discovered that the defendant failed to correctly transmit and deliver the message, in so- far as it could, under all the circumstances surrounding it, reasonably do so, to so conduct itself as not to- swell, but to- minimize, the defendant’s losses.-—-Dickerson v. Finley, 158 Ala. 149, 48 South. 548. In the application of this rule the courts hold, however, that: “Where the conduct of the party injured, in his efforts to extricate himself from loss, does not appear to have been improvident, nor in bad faith, and the loss is shown from such conduct, the burden of proof is upon the author of the wrong to- show that the loss might have been mitigated by a different
2. The facts in the instant case, in short, are that the plaintiff sent a telegram to the Fairbanks Company, at New Orleans, ordering some machinery to be shipped to it at Lockhart, Ala. The telegraph company, in transmitting the message, made an error, and though that error the dimensions of the machinery were materially changed. The Fairbanks Company did not have in stock the machinery, called for in the telegram as it was delivered to it in New Orleans, and immediately ordered the machinery mentioned in the telegram to' be shipped to the plaintiff from Oneida, N. Y. When the machinery reached Lockhart, it was discovered that it was not the machinery which the plaintiff had ordered, and that this was due to the error which had been committed in transmitting the telegram from Lockhart to New Orleans. Of course, it was not known that the error in transmitting the telegram had been committed, until the machinery reached Lockhart. The machinery Avas of unusual size and was practically Avorthless at Lockhart. The makers of the machinery in Oneida, N. Y., had shipped the machinery which the Fairbanks Company had ordered them to ship, and therefore the Fairbanks Company Avas plainly liable to the makers of the machinery in Oneida, N. Y., for the purchase price of the machinery. The machinery was not what the plaintiff ordered, and when it reached Lockhart the plaintiff might have rejected it.—Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Anniston Cordage Co., supra. The machinery Avas, as already stated, practically of no value at Lockhart, and if the plaintiff had rejected the ma
3. The plaintiff, however, did not see proper to pursue the course above indicated. It accepted the machinery, paid its purchase price to the Fairbanks Company, took (for its protection against any technical misapprehension or mistake as to its legal right) a. transfer from the Fairbanks Company of all its claims against the telegraph company, growing out of this matter, and then brought this suit for its damages growing out of the breach of the contract.
It is claimed by the telegraph company that, in this action in which the plaintiff sues for damages for a breach of the contract, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the difference between the sum Avhich it paid the Fairbanks Company for the machinery, and the value of the machinery at Lockhart. The theory of the telegraph company is that as the Fairbanks Company only had an
We do not think that this argument is tenable. The plaintiff ordered the machinery for a particular purpose. The telegram shoAved this fact on its face, and the telegraph company Avas apprised of it Avhen it received the telegram for transmission. When the machinery was shipped to the plaintiff, there Avas therefore—except for the error in the telegram—a warranty on the part of the Fairbanks Company that it was reasonably fit for the purpose for which it was ordered. But for the error in the telegram the plaintiff Avould have had a right—Avhether the machinery Avas or Avas not suitable for the purpose for Avhich it Avas ordered—to accept the machinery, and, if unsuitable, to maintain an action on the warranty in the contract of sale.—5 Mayf. Dig. p. 856, subd. 31. The payment by the plaintiff to the Fairbanks Company of the purchase price of the machinery did the telegraph company no harm. The damages for which the telegraph company had rendered itself liable by reason of the error which was committed in transmitting the telegram was not thereby changed. The plaintiff did that for Avhich the telegraph company (the wrongdoer) had no right to complain, viz, it paid the Fairbanks Company the money which, in good faith, it had paid out on what it had the right to- assume was—■ and but for the error of the telegraph company would have been—a true and correct order of the plaintiff. The only reason why the Fairbanks Company had no right-—if the plaintiff had refused to accept the machinery—to maintain an action ex contractu against the defendant was that it was not a party to the contract and was not the sole beneficiary of the contract.—Western
Upon what reasoning the defendant can support the theory that the plaintiff owed it the duty to refuse to- accept the machinery when it discovered the error in the telegram, we are not able to discover. The plaintiff did not get for its money what it wanted, simply because the defendant breached its contract to correctly transmit the message; and, as the thing it received was of but little value, the difference between what the plaintiff paid for the thing it actually ordered, and the value of the thing it actually received, is plainly an element of plaintiff’s damages naturally and proximately flowing from the breach of the contract. It does not lie in the mouth of the defendant, who breached the contract, to say that the plaintiff might have refused to accept the machinery and thus allow the loss to fall on the innocent sendee of the message.—Cordage Co., supra; Jackson Lumber Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 7 Ala. App. 644, 62 South. 266.
Affirmed.